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August 14, 2009

G115: Red Sox 8, Rangers 4

If the Red Sox get hot and finally start playing the way we know they can and go deep into October, we should look back on this game -- and, specifically, the ninth inning -- as a catalyst.

Down by two runs and facing Frank Francisco in the top of the ninth, David Ortiz got things started. Flo was batting in the #7 spot for the first time since May 2003. He had walked his first two times up, then drilled a two-run homer to right-center to tie the game at 2-2 in the sixth. Tiz looked at a ball from Francisco, then lined a double into the right field corner.

Jason Varitek, after getting ahead 3-0, grounded a full-count pitch to second. Omar Vizquel went to his right and attempted an off-balance throw. It was low and Tek beat it out, with Ortiz taking third. Jacoby Ellsbury singled up the middle, scoring Ortiz. Boston trailed 4-3.

Chris Woodward, who had taken over at shortstop in the seventh, tried two half-assed bunt attempts before striking out. Having failed to advance the runners, Terry Francona put Clay Buchholz in to pinch-run for Varitek. We've heard a few times that Laptop is one of the fastest runners on the team, and now he represented the tying run.

Dustin Pedroia crushed a 1-1 pitch to deep left field. I thought it was gone, but it hit off the wall, beyond David Murphy's leap. Buchholz was between second and third and seemed to have trouble seeing the ball against the different coloured lights of the scoreboard on the wall. He hesitated, then took off once he saw the ball had not been caught. However, that hesitation, and a stumble around third, cost him as he was cut down at the plate. (Happy 25th birthday, Clay.)

With one out to go, Victor Martinez was up with Lyndon at third and FY at second. He feel behind 1-2, fouled off two pitches, then checked his swing for ball 3 (whew!). After another foul, he doubled to right. Both runners scored and Boston led for the first time in the game, 5-4. Jason Bay singled to right and Martinez scored. Four pitches later, J.D. Drew hit a two-run home run to right center and it was 8-4.

Jonathan Papelbon allowed a one-out double to Vizquel, but struck out Michael Young and Marlon Byrd to end the game, giving the Red Sox a 1.5-game lead over Texas in the wild card standings.

Lester (6-6-3-3-11, 117) had a bad first two batters. Vizquel walked and Young cranked a dong, and after only seven pitches, Lester trailed 2-0. But he worked out of his other jams. He got double play grounders in the second and third. After walking the first two Rangers in the fourth, he struck out the next three. In the sixth, after Ortiz had tied the game, Lester allowed a double and a single to give Texas a 3-2 lead. But again, he finished that inning by striking out the side. Lester struck out more than 10 batters for the sixth time this season, the most ever for a Red Sox left-hander.

The Yankees scored two in the top of the ninth to beat Seattle 4-2 and stay 6.5 GA of the Red Sox in the East.

The Red Sox have a slim 0.5-game lead over Texas in the wild card standings. Boston trails the Yankees in the East by 6.5 games. Lester gets the series started tonight, with Brad Penny and Junichi Tazawa following over the weekend.

Alas, poor Varitek! I knew him, Martinez: a fellowof infinite jest, of most excellent captaincy: he hathborne the Sox on his back a thousand times; and now, howabhorred in my imagination it is! His bat whiffs atit. Here hung those curveballs he had hit I knownot how oft. Where be your might now? Yourcontact? Your swings? Your flashes of power,that were wont to set the crowd on a roar? Not onenow, to mock your old Heidi? Quite cap-fallen?Now get you to Lester's chamber, and tell him paintthe corners an inch thick, to this favour he mustcome; make them swing at that.

HowBoutDemSox

To score runs, or not to score runs: that is the question:Whether 'tis better in the loss column to sufferThe GIDP and Ks of terrible offense,Or to take action against some slumping veterans,And by benching, end them? To sit: to rest;No more; and by a sit to say we endThe heart-ache and the thousand natural shocksThat PED-inflated muscle tone is heir to, 'tis a lineupDevoutly to be wish'd.

Sprowl

Not that I think you did not love the Red Sox;But that I know love is begun by time;And that I see, in trade deadline deals,Time qualifies the spark and fire of it.There lives within the very flame of tradeA kind of wick or snuff that will abate it;And no prospect is at a like goodness still;For pitching, growing to a surfeit,Dies in its own too much. That we would doWe should do when we would; for this "would" changesAnd hath abatements and delays as manyAs there are Gonzalez, Halladay, HernandezAnd then this "should" is like a depreciating prospect,That hurts by failing. But, to the wild card race —Texas comes back: what would you undertake,To bring us a competent shortstop in deedMore than in words?

247 comments:

Tito must be a covert gamethreader :)Or maybe just a lurker.Early service time and central starting time means I might catch the end of the game. That is... if I don't find a cold beer and a barstool with my name on it somewhere other than at home.Be wicked, Lester!

Fear no more the heat o' th' sunNor the Rangers' lineup's thunder,Thou must pitch until you're doneAnd give up just three runs, or under.Golden gloves your fielders lack,Tazawa, but they'll have your back.

****

This is an important game.

I would like the Boston Red Sox to have scored at least one more run than the Texas Rangers when the umpires decree that the contest is complete.

I used this one the other night when we were riffing on runs - song lyrics, shakespeare, famous literary lines (it was the best of runs, it was the worst of runs), even bible verses. Some great stuff in there - last Sunday night, I believe.